July 1989, Page 19
Religion and the Middle East
By the Reverend L. Humphrey Walz
Palestinian Clergy Appeal to International Community
Wearied by years of rebuffed individual approaches to Israeli authorities,
the bishops, patriarchs and other clergy of the region have turned
to the international community and the United Nations with a joint
appeal to "give urgent attention to the plight of the Palestinians,
and to work for a speedy and just resolution of the Palestinian
problem."
Speaking for their Eastern Orthodox (Greek), Catholic (Latin, Melkite,
Syrian and Franciscan), Oriental Orthodox (Armenian and Syrian),
Anglican and Lutheran constituencies, they refer to "the tragic
and unnecessary loss of Palestinian lives, especially among minors.
. . by the unwarranted use of firearms and ... the excessive use
of force by the Israeli military; mass administrative arrests, and
continuing detention of adults and minors without trial; and collective
punishment, including demolition of homes and depriving whole communities
of basic services like water and electricity. . "
Specifically, they appeal to the world community to support two
demands: First, for the reopening of schools and universities, closed
for the past 16 months, so that thousands of children can enjoy
again their basic rights of education; and secondly, for the authorities
to respect the right of believers to enjoy free access to all places
of worship on the holy days of all religions.
Israeli interference with Christian worship had escalated during
Lent and was followed by enhanced restrictions on Muslim worship
during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. Finally, the announcement
of the Israeli government plan to ban West Bank Muslims from worshipping
in the Al-Aqsa Mosque in East Jerusalem triggered the joint protest.
World Council of Churches General Secretary Emilio Castro's response
was: "We admire your courage to witness to the peace of Jesus
Christ against all oppression ... The withdrawal of the occupiers
and the opening of negotiations for a solution which would give
satisfaction to both Israel and to the Palestinian nation will bring
about a new era of reconciliation for the whole region."
Meanwhile, on the US political scene, Congressman Howard Neilson
(R-UT) has been pressing for the school reopenings. Secretary of
State Baker agrees and has appealed to American supporters of Israel
to urge that country to replace its expansionist dreams with willingness
to negotiate with its neighbors.
Jews from Iran Bypass Israel
Citing Austrian Foreign Ministry statistics for the past five years,
Vienna's Die Presse reports that 98 percent of some 9,000 Jewish
emigrants checking in there from Iran have opted for ultimate destinations
other than Israel. The Austrian newspaper does not comment on religious
considerations as possibly involved in their decisions or indicate
whether or not they have deliberately rejected the religious Zionist
doctrine that a full Jewish religious life is impossible in nonJewish
territory. Apparently, for them the lure of Israel has been dimmed
chiefly by accounts of its deteriorating economic and political
circumstances and of its discrimination against Asiatic Jews already
there.
Taylor-Made Mideast Compilation
Indiana's Taylor University has spent a significant portion of
its 143 interdenominational years exploring and applying an "evangelical"
understanding of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. From that vantage,
10 articles in its current alumni-and-friends quarterly focus on
what it calls the "Cousin Conflict" between Arab and Jew.
Palestinian and Israeli flags unfurled on the cover, their poles
intertwined by an olive branch struggling to bind them together,
foretell the common emphasis of its contents.
A limited overprinting makes copies available free (although you
might want to enclose a donation). Write to Taylor University Magazine,
Upland, IN 46989.
Solidarity with Palestinians: A Jewish Theological Perspective
The Palestinian uprising has shattered many widespread assumptions.
Among these is the credibility of the "holocaust theology"
popularized by Elie Wiesel and others. Perceiving Jews as persistently,
interminably threatened in a world dominated by hostile non-Jews,
it considers a powerful state of their own as the one fair and practical
climax to "the dream of Jewish redemption." However, Mary
knoll Professor Marc H. Ellis has told his fellow Jewish New Outlook
(Tel Aviv) readers, the conditions spotlighted by intifada coverage
have changed all that. Under the heading, "Solidarity with
the Palestinian People: A Jewish Theological Perspective,"
he writes: "Our sense of ourselves as a suffering and justice-oriented
people is blown away by the beatings and torture" of unarmed
civilians by Israeli troops. "Our identity, so recently and
effectively built around the state of Israel, leaves us with little
to define ourselves except in a way that is clearly unacceptable
in the ethical realm and clearly counterproductive in the political:
as a warrior people... [with) power but not clear values to tame
or steer it in the direction of justice. . What is at stake is our
very witness—the ethical center which is the essence of what
it means to be Jewish."
The overall framework from which this thinking emerged is available
at length in Ellis' Toward a Jewish Theology of Liberation (Orbis,
1987). His further application of his ideas appears in the Garrett-Evangelical
Theological Seminary 1988 lecture on "Creating a Theological
Framework for Peace in the Middle East. " This is available
in a collection of scholarly Muslim, Christian and Jewish essays
in The Role of American Religious Leaders in the Middle East Peace
Process. To purchase this collection, send $5 to the American-Arab
Affairs Council at 1730 M St., NW, 512, Washington, DC 20036.
IMPACT and Churches for Middle East Peace
"That was the meatiest day-long talk-fest I ever attended.
" Such was the judgment of one seasoned conventioneer as he
emerged from the final crowded session on "Palestine and Israel"
at the national United Methodist headquarters building in Washington,
DC.
The "meat "—provided by the sponsoring Churches
for Middle East Peace (C-MEP)—was mainly a deliberately mixed
diet of the contrasting but equally vigorous convictions of four
key panelists deeply, personally involved in the subject: Anglican
Jerusalem Bishop Samir Kafity and Hassan Abd-el Rahman, Palestine
information officer in Washington for the League of Arab States,
gave respectively the perceptions of Palestinians still resident
in, and those barred from, their native land. Hillel Schenker of
the dovish New Outlook provided an overview of peace-and-war planks
in various Israeli party platforms. And American Zionist Hyman Bookbiner
(see AET
Book Club listing) spoke up for Israeli militancy.
The problem of US churches in dealing ecumenically with Christians
and Christian issues in the Middle East has been partially resolved
by the 1984 creation of C-MEP (110 Maryland Ave., N.E., Washington,
DC 20002). In C-MEP, 10 church bodies have joined the Mennonites
and Brethren in confronting Middle East issues. Their main joint
concerns include human rights, terrorism, the peace process, arms
transfers and the unique status of Jerusalem. They consider the
US government's role as crucial for bringing together Israeli, Palestinian
and all other involved parties to work out negotiations for lasting
peace in "the region where the Prince of Peace blessed the
peacemakers."
The Reverend L. Humphrey Walz D. D., retired associate executive
of the Presbyterian Synod of the Northeast, is active in denominational
and ecumenical peacemaking movements.
SIDEBAR
All About Iraq
A funny thing happened on the way to the printer, twice. In June
we planned a special issue on Iraq, but events in Lebanon intervened.
In July there were PAC charts that wouldn't wait. So, the Washington
Report on Middle East Affairs is presenting in this issue articles
on political changes and on women in Iraq. Subsequent issues will
present articles on Iraq's economy; human rights and minorities;
Iraq's remarkable historical record that extends, unbroken, to the
Sumerian invention of writing; and the origins, costs and possible
solutions for the dispute with Iran. |